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Get access to free live lectures, every week, from top radiologists.
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49 topics, 3 hr. 16 min.
Inner Ear Preview
2 m.Inner Ear – Introduction
2 m.Anatomy of the Internal Auditory Canal (IAC)
8 m.Coronal Anatomy of the Inner Ear
4 m.Axial IAC Anatomy and Otospongiosis/Otosclerosis
6 m.Coronal IAC Anatomy and Facial Nerve Segments
6 m.MRI imaging techniques and cochlea aplasia
7 m.IAC Congenital Lesions & Syndromes - Summary
7 m.Cochlear Hypoplasia
8 m.Cochlear Nerve Deficiency, Pontine Tegmental Cap Dysplasia
5 m.Bilateral Cochlea Nerve Deficiency
5 m.Labyrinthine Dysplasia/Syndromes - Summary
10 m.Incomplete Partition Type 1
3 m.Incomplete Partition Type 2 – Summary
3 m.Bilateral Incomplete Partition Type 2
3 m.Mondini Malformation, Incomplete Partition Type II
2 m.Incomplete Partition Type II, Mondini Malformation, Semicircular Canal Abnormality
3 m.Vestibular Malformation
3 m.Enlarged Endolymphatic Sac
2 m.Incomplete Partition Type III – Summary
4 m.Down Syndrome – Summary
6 m.Down Syndrome, Semicircular Canal Deformity, Cochlear Aperture Stenosis
6 m.Down Syndrome, Aperture Stenosis
6 m.Cochlear Hypoplasia and Aperture Stenosis - Summary
4 m.Semicircular Canal (SCC) Dehiscence – Summary
4 m.Semicircular Canal (SCC) Dehiscence
3 m.Semicircular Canal (SCC) – Oblique Reformat
2 m.Inflammatory/Infectious Lesions of the Inner Ear - Summary
7 m.Labyrinthitis, Secondary to Otomastoiditis
3 m.Labyrinthine Fistula Mastoidectomy and Cochlea implant
3 m.Viral Labyrinthitis
3 m.Otospongiosis (Otosclerosis) - Summary
10 m.Bilateral Otospongiosis (Otosclerosis)
5 m.Bilateral Retrofenestral Otospongiosis
4 m.Bilateral Otospongiosis and SCC Dehiscence
3 m.Otospongiosis, Left Stapedectomy
3 m.Labyrinthitis Ossificans – Summary
11 m.Post Traumatic Labyrinthitis Ossificans
3 m.Labyrinthitis Ossificans, Cochlear Turn
2 m.Labyrinthitis Ossificans, Superior SCC
2 m.Unilateral Labyrinthine Ossificans
2 m.Petrous Apex Lesions
8 m.Right Cholesterol Granuloma
5 m.Intravestibular/Labyrinthine schwannoma
3 m.Labyrinthine Schwannoma
4 m.Left Side Labyrinthine/Vestibule Schwannoma
2 m.Endolymphatic Sac Tumor (ELST) – Summary
4 m.Endolymphatic Sac Tumor and VHL
4 m.Inner Ear Malignant Neoplasm and Trauma Closing Points
6 m.0:01
When looking at inner ear pathology,
0:03
the neoplasms are a relatively small amount of
0:06
the pathology that affects the inner ear.
0:09
I would say less than 5%.
0:11
This is if we're excluding the internal auditory canal
0:14
where we have our vestibular schwannomas,
0:16
and that would be considered a posterior fossa
0:21
intracranial lesion as opposed to
0:23
an inner ear lesion. However,
0:24
there are some neoplasms that can occur in the inner
0:27
ear, and we'll first start with the benign ones.
0:30
Here we have a patient who has an area of
0:34
enhancement within the vestibule of the semicircular
0:39
canals and labyrinthine structure.
0:41
So the internal auditory canal is seen anteriorly.
0:45
We have the cochlea,
0:47
but we have this focal area of enhancement on this
0:50
post-gad T1-weighted and fat-suppressed scan
0:53
provided to me by Azito Horsandi.
0:55
If you look on the Fiesta T2-weighted scan,
0:58
you see that within the normal bright
1:01
signal intensity of the vestibule,
1:04
you have a soft tissue mass,
1:05
and this represents that schwannoma.
1:08
Here's another example.
1:11
On this case,
1:12
we see that there is enhancement of the basal
1:16
turn of the cochlea on the right side,
1:19
which is obliterated on the CISS image.
1:23
Here is the normal side on the left side,
1:26
where you have the complete turns of the cochlea
1:28
and absence of contrast enhancement.
1:31
And this is an example of a cochlear schwannoma.
1:35
It's a type of labyrinthine schwannoma affecting
1:38
the basal turn of the cochlea.
1:40
Now, how do I know that this is not a labyrinthitis?
1:44
How do we know that this is not enhancement
1:46
secondary to an inflammatory process?
1:48
It's difficult to tell if you don't have expansion
1:52
of the cochlear turns or, as in this case,
1:55
the vestibule itself.
1:57
So what one does is you may treat for the
2:02
labyrinthitis and then do a follow-up scan.
2:04
And if there is persistent enhancement
2:06
and persistent symptoms,
2:08
that would suggest that this represents a schwannoma
2:10
as opposed to inflammatory enhancement.
Interactive Transcript
0:01
When looking at inner ear pathology,
0:03
the neoplasms are a relatively small amount of
0:06
the pathology that affects the inner ear.
0:09
I would say less than 5%.
0:11
This is if we're excluding the internal auditory canal
0:14
where we have our vestibular schwannomas,
0:16
and that would be considered a posterior fossa
0:21
intracranial lesion as opposed to
0:23
an inner ear lesion. However,
0:24
there are some neoplasms that can occur in the inner
0:27
ear, and we'll first start with the benign ones.
0:30
Here we have a patient who has an area of
0:34
enhancement within the vestibule of the semicircular
0:39
canals and labyrinthine structure.
0:41
So the internal auditory canal is seen anteriorly.
0:45
We have the cochlea,
0:47
but we have this focal area of enhancement on this
0:50
post-gad T1-weighted and fat-suppressed scan
0:53
provided to me by Azito Horsandi.
0:55
If you look on the Fiesta T2-weighted scan,
0:58
you see that within the normal bright
1:01
signal intensity of the vestibule,
1:04
you have a soft tissue mass,
1:05
and this represents that schwannoma.
1:08
Here's another example.
1:11
On this case,
1:12
we see that there is enhancement of the basal
1:16
turn of the cochlea on the right side,
1:19
which is obliterated on the CISS image.
1:23
Here is the normal side on the left side,
1:26
where you have the complete turns of the cochlea
1:28
and absence of contrast enhancement.
1:31
And this is an example of a cochlear schwannoma.
1:35
It's a type of labyrinthine schwannoma affecting
1:38
the basal turn of the cochlea.
1:40
Now, how do I know that this is not a labyrinthitis?
1:44
How do we know that this is not enhancement
1:46
secondary to an inflammatory process?
1:48
It's difficult to tell if you don't have expansion
1:52
of the cochlear turns or, as in this case,
1:55
the vestibule itself.
1:57
So what one does is you may treat for the
2:02
labyrinthitis and then do a follow-up scan.
2:04
And if there is persistent enhancement
2:06
and persistent symptoms,
2:08
that would suggest that this represents a schwannoma
2:10
as opposed to inflammatory enhancement.
Report
Description
Faculty
David M Yousem, MD, MBA
Professor of Radiology, Vice Chairman and Associate Dean
Johns Hopkins University
Tags
Temporal bone
Neuroradiology
Neoplastic
MRI
Head and Neck
Brain
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